MARCH 2002 Appalachian Blacksmiths Special Association Reprint Edition Newsletter, March 2002 Page 1 Perhaps the profound significance oftheCitizensBank building here, on the northwest corner of Main Avenue and Second Street (201 Main), can be expressed as follows: It is one of two reasons (the old State Hospital being the other) for a connoisseur of transcendent architecture and building ornamentation to travel a great distance to visit Weston. As a creation in Art Deco style, it rivals all others of that genre, nationally and internationally. The structure's refined grandeur begins with the citadel -like, 50-foot high exterior walls of gracefully carved, gray Indiana limestone, resting on a foundation of polished gray granite. Set in the south, north and east walls and flooding the bank's interior with natural light are huge, CitizensBankofWeston By M. William Adler Photo taken in 1930; courtesy of Claire Yellin, SamuelYellin Metalworkers Co. bronze grillaged windows, graced with painted iron panels cast from a sculptor's models depicting craftsmen at work, made for and unique to this building. The original, now south wing ofthe bank incorporates its main entrance, the whole of it, beginning with its seemingly impregnable, handfashioned wrought iron gates -displaying West Virginia's Great Seal -guaranteeing enduring strength, authority and integrity that translate as security ofthe institution within. High above the entry and symbolic as well is a dominant, carved American eagle surmounting the replica of an ancient Roman lictor's insignia of law, order and protection. The pair of swinging double doors behind the gates were made to order from imported oriental teak, a durable wood proved capable of withstanding the ravages of West Virginia weather for seventy years, and appearing to have